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Archive for the ‘hedge funds’ Category

July 14th, 2009

Goldman’s Viniar: Why pay twice?

Posted by: Joseph Giannone

HEALTHFOOD-ASIA/Turns out Goldman Sachs is a staunch advocate of going organic — when it comes to the money management business.

As Barclays auctioned off its Barclays Global Investors unit this year, Goldman was widely seen as a likely acquirer. That is until Blackrock In under Larry Fink emerged as the buyer with a $13.5 billion deal.

Lots of other money managers are expected to be sold, as the industry consolidates and cash-strapped banks look for valuables to pawn. But Viniar told analysts Goldman’s preference is to grow the business without deals, and appeared to question the very idea of money manager deals.

“If there were an acquisition that made sense financially for us to do, we would certainly consider it,” he said, something he says every three months to calm down excitable analysts. “When we look at the prices of most of the acquisitions, we think that they haven’t made sense in that you’ve had to assume really heroic growth rates that we don’t think are realistic.” 

Jefferies Putnam Lovell recently said it counted 35 management deals in the second quarter, compared with 52 deals a year earlier. Besides the BGI takeover, Aquiline Capital Partners acquired Conning & Co,  JPMorgan Chase bought the remainder of its Highbridge Capital Management hedge fund unit and Woori Finance purchased Credit Suisse’s 30 percent interest in a joint venture.

Yet Viniar notes money management firm deals are tricky, since buyers have to pay a premium for the company and then put up more money to retain star managers. And even as billions of profits come sloshing into Goldman’s coffers, Viniar apparently doesn’t like to part ways with the firm’s cash.

“It has taken a while, but we’ve grown (the asset management business) quite successfully, almost exclusively organically.” he said. “And the high likelihood is that is the way we are going to continue to grow it in the future.”

(Photo: A customer walks past organic products in an organic food chain store in Taipei/Pichi Chuang)

May 18th, 2009

Deals du jour

Posted by: Quentin Webb
A man rides past a newsstand with French daily newspapers in Nice, southeastern France, February 24, 2009.

AIG plans to float its Asian crown jewel, Volkswagen halts talks with Porsche, Nomura hires for a massive push in U.S. equities, and more. Here are the latest deal-related stories:

AIG to launch IPO for Asia crown jewel

Volkswagen halts tie-up talks with Porsche

Nomura hires for massive U.S. equity push

Cubs’ offer won’t be voted on next week: sources

Babcock & Brown infrastructure fund gets acquired

China pension fund plans foreign PE deals: sources

China government OKs Minmetals’ OZ Minerals deal

Daiwa SMBC to buy unit of Britain’s Close Brothers

Whitehaven says to drop merger deal with Gloucester

Metro to present Karstadt deal outline: sources

And in Europe’s morning papers:

* Hedge fund manager Noam Gottesman, co-chief executive of GLG Partners Inc (GLG.N), plans to move to New York from London to build up the fund’s U.S. assets, the Daily Telegraph said.

* Alan Miller, former fund manager at New Star, plans to launch two new funds in a joint venture with Alexander Spencer Churchill, the Daily Telegraph said.

* Britain’s Financial Services Authority is investigating potential insider dealing in shares of pub companies Punch Taverns (PUB.L) and Enterprise Inns (ETI.L), the Daily Telegraph reported. Reuters story here.

* Societe Generale (SOGN.PA) CEO Frederic Oudea has said that further writedowns are possible at the bank, depending on market conditions, Le Parisien newspaper reported. Reuters story here.

April 1st, 2009

Dog Days at Cerberus

Posted by: Joseph Giannone

HUNGARY/Embattled Cerberus Capital Management, a private-equity firm named for the mythological three-headed dog that guards the gates of Hades, has been overwhelmed by clients seeking to withdraw money from its $2 billion hedge fund, Cerberus Partners.

Website FINAlternatives said that fund investors representing 17 percent of the assets wanted to withdraw their money in December, the most recent month for which statistics are available. Now, with Cerberus's investments in Chrysler and GMAC going bad and unemployed investors needing to tap more funds, that figure may be heading higher.

Now, according to this Bloomberg report, Cerberus sent a letter to clients warning them that it could take "years" to meet all the redemption requests, which have stacked up since the firm imposed gates in December.

“The fund’s withdrawal requests have increased substantially since the fund suspended withdrawals, partially because investors wanted to reserve their place in line and partially due to individual investors’ own liquidity needs,” according to the letter.

Like some other hedge fund firms juggling the desires of investors who want their money, with trying to avoid gutting their portfolio with forced selling, Cerberus is considering creating a special vehicle that would carve out a portion of the fund to be liquidated and distributed to investors who want out.  But it also says this would not be a quick fix. Company founder Stephen Feinberg told investors the fund “Would be managed by the general partner until it is fully liquidated, a process which might take several years.”

So should Cerberus investors lump the hedge fund in with its auto wrecks? The Cerberus Partners fund lost 16 percent in the year ended last November and fell 3 percent to $1.99 billion in the first two months of February, but at least one private equity investor tells us they are not any worse at this business than their competition. Still, investors may want to tread warily around the three-headed dog when Feinberg says the current mess has created some great new distressed debt opportunities for his firm.

Cerberus spokesman Peter Duda declined to comment for this post.

(PHOTO: A Belgian shepherd practises an attack on his trainer during the European dog show in Budapest October 3, 2008. REUTERS/Laszlo Balogh)